An quick overview of human genetic linkage analysis Terry Speed Genetics & Bioinformatics, WEHI Statistics, UCB NWO/IOP Genomics Winterschool Mathematics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
15 The Genetic Basis of Complex Inheritance
Advertisements

Linkage and Genetic Mapping
Lecture 2 Strachan and Read Chapter 13
The genetic dissection of complex traits
Planning breeding programs for impact
Note that the genetic map is different for men and women Recombination frequency is higher in meiosis in women.
Genetic research designs in the real world Vishwajit L Nimgaonkar MD, PhD University of Pittsburgh
SNP Applications statwww.epfl.ch/davison/teaching/Microarrays/snp.ppt.
ASSOCIATION MAPPING WITH TASSEL Presenter: VG SHOBHANA PhD Student CPMB.
Genetic Analysis in Human Disease
Tutorial #2 by Ma’ayan Fishelson. Crossing Over Sometimes in meiosis, homologous chromosomes exchange parts in a process called crossing-over. New combinations.
Mapping Genes for SLE: A Paradigm for Human Disease? Stephen S. Rich, Ph.D. Department of Public Health Sciences Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
Discovery of a rare arboreal forest-dwelling flying reptile (Pterosauria, Pterodactyloidea) from China Wang et al. PNAS Feb. 11, 2008.
Basics of Linkage Analysis
. Parametric and Non-Parametric analysis of complex diseases Lecture #6 Based on: Chapter 25 & 26 in Terwilliger and Ott’s Handbook of Human Genetic Linkage.
Linkage Analysis: An Introduction Pak Sham Twin Workshop 2001.
Genome wide association studies of complex traits in outbred and isolated populations CM van Duijn Genetic Epidemiology Unit Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The.
POSITIONAL CLONING TWO EXAMPLES. Inheritance pattern - dominant autosomal Entirely penetrant and fatal Frequency - about 1/10,000 live births Late onset.
Association Mapping David Evans. Outline Definitions / Terminology What is (genetic) association? How do we test for association? When to use association.
Biology and Bioinformatics Gabor T. Marth Department of Biology, Boston College BI820 – Seminar in Quantitative and Computational Problems.
Introduction to Medical Genetics Fadel A. Sharif.
Quantitative Genetics
Introduction to Linkage Analysis March Stages of Genetic Mapping Are there genes influencing this trait? Epidemiological studies Where are those.
Positional Cloning LOD Sib pairs Chromosome Region Association Study Genetics Genomics Physical Mapping/ Sequencing Candidate Gene Selection/ Polymorphism.
2050 VLSB. Dad phase unknown A1 A2 0.5 (total # meioses) Odds = 1/2[(1-r) n r k ]+ 1/2[(1-r) n r k ]odds ratio What single r value best explains the data?
Something related to genetics? Dr. Lars Eijssen. Bioinformatics to understand studies in genomics – São Paulo – June Image:
Polymorphisms – SNP, InDel, Transposon BMI/IBGP 730 Victor Jin, Ph.D. (Slides from Dr. Kun Huang) Department of Biomedical Informatics Ohio State University.
RFLP DNA molecular testing and DNA Typing
Alcohol & other addictions: can DNA make a difference? Dr Martin Kennedy Department of Pathology Christchurch School of Medicine & Health Sciences University.
Understanding Genetics of Schizophrenia
Genetic Analysis in Human Disease. Learning Objectives Describe the differences between a linkage analysis and an association analysis Identify potentially.
. Summary Lecture This class has been edited from several sources. Primarily from Terry Speed’s homepage at Stanford and the Technion course “Introduction.
Standardization of Pedigree Collection. Genetics of Alzheimer’s Disease Alzheimer’s Disease Gene 1 Gene 2 Environmental Factor 1 Environmental Factor.
Modes of selection on quantitative traits. Directional selection The population responds to selection when the mean value changes in one direction Here,
Methods of Genome Mapping linkage maps, physical maps, QTL analysis The focus of the course should be on analytical (bioinformatic) tools for genome mapping,
Introduction to BST775: Statistical Methods for Genetic Analysis I Course master: Degui Zhi, Ph.D. Assistant professor Section on Statistical Genetics.
The medical relevance of genome variability Gabor T. Marth, D.Sc. Department of Biology, Boston College
The Pie of Schizophrenia (Theoretical: Early Molecular Biology)
A gene is composed of strings of bases (A,G, C, T) held together by a sugar phosphate backbone. Reminder - nucleotides are the building blocks.
The Complexities of Data Analysis in Human Genetics Marylyn DeRiggi Ritchie, Ph.D. Center for Human Genetics Research Vanderbilt University Nashville,
The medical relevance of genome variability Gabor T. Marth, D.Sc. Department of Biology, Boston College Medical Genomics Course – Debrecen,
CS177 Lecture 10 SNPs and Human Genetic Variation
Molecular medicine - 2.
Experimental Design and Data Structure Supplement to Lecture 8 Fall
Quantitative Genetics. Continuous phenotypic variation within populations- not discrete characters Phenotypic variation due to both genetic and environmental.
Complex Traits Most neurobehavioral traits are complex Multifactorial
Quantitative Genetics
Discovery of a rare arboreal forest-dwelling flying reptile (Pterosauria, Pterodactyloidea) from China Wang et al. PNAS Feb. 11, 2008.
Lecture 6. Functional Genomics: DNA microarrays and re-sequencing individual genomes by hybridization.
An quick overview of human genetic linkage analysis
Chapter 22 - Quantitative genetics: Traits with a continuous distribution of phenotypes are called continuous traits (e.g., height, weight, growth rate,
Notes from the GAW14 “Genetic Analysis Workshop 14” September 7-10, 2004 Noordwijkerhout, NL Kelly Burkett September 20 th, 2004.
A Quantitative Overview to Gene Expression Profiling in Animal Genetics Armidale Animal Breeding Summer Course, UNE, Feb Final Remarks Genetical.
GENETICS Dr. Samar Saleh Assiss. Lecturer Mosul Medical College Pathology3 rd year.
Genetics of Gene Expression BIOS Statistics for Systems Biology Spring 2008.
Chapters 13 & 14 GENETIC ENGINEERING & THE HUMAN GENOME.
8 and 11 April, 2005 Chapter 17 Population Genetics Genes in natural populations.
© 2007 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 2 Genetics: You and Your Family Health History.
1 Finding disease genes: A challenge for Medicine, Mathematics and Computer Science Andrew Collins, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology and Bioinformatics.
Common variation, GWAS & PLINK
Ø Novel approaches for linkage mapping in dairy cattle
Introduction to Gene Mapping Techniques Lecture 2
Copyright © 2001 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Introduction to bioinformatics lecture 11 SNP by Ms.Shumaila Azam
Genome-wide Associations
Linking Genetic Variation to Important Phenotypes
Chapter 7 Multifactorial Traits
Medical genomics BI420 Department of Biology, Boston College
Linkage Analysis Problems
Medical genomics BI420 Department of Biology, Boston College
Presentation transcript:

An quick overview of human genetic linkage analysis Terry Speed Genetics & Bioinformatics, WEHI Statistics, UCB NWO/IOP Genomics Winterschool Mathematics and Biology December 17, 2001 Lecture 1

Purpose of human linkage analysis To obtain a crude chromosomal location of the gene or genes associated with a phenotype of interest, e.g. a genetic disease or an important quantitative trait. Examples: cystic fibrosis (found), diabetes, multiple sclerosis, and blood pressure

Why at a Genomics Winter School? Because the identification of genes contributing to genetic disease or other phenotypes is a (perhaps the) major application of the tools and techniques of genomics. Examples include: the physical mapping of clones, sequencing candidate regions, identification of genes in DNA sequence, sequence analysis of candidate genes, and mapping expression differences between genes in broad regions..

Linkage Strategies Traditional (from the 1980s or earlier) – Linkage analysis on pedigrees – Allele-sharing methods: candidate genes, genome screen – Association studies: candidate genes – Animal models: identifying candidate genes Newer (from the 1990s) – Focus on special populations (Finland, Hutterites) – Haplotype-sharing (many variants) – Congenic/consomic lines in mice (new for complex traits)

Linkage analysis

Allele-sharing methods

Association Studies

Animal Models

Linkage Strategies II On the horizon (here) – Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNPs) – Functional analyses: finding candidate genes Needed (starting to happen) – New multilocus analysis techniques, especially – Ways of dealing with large pedigrees – Better phenotypes: ones closer to gene products – Large collaborations

Horses for courses Each of these strategies has its domain of applicability Each of them has a different theoretical basis and method of analysis Which is appropriate for mapping genes for a disease of interest depends on a number of matters, most importantly the disease, and the population from which the sample comes.

The disease matters Definition (phenotype), prevalence, features such as age of onset Genetics: nature of genes (resistance, susceptibility), number of genes, nature of their contributions (additive, interacting), size of effect Environment, other relevant variables (e.g. sex) Genotype-by-environment interactions

The population matters History: pattern of growth, immigration Composition: homogeneous or melting pot, or in between Mating patterns: family sizes, mate choice (level of consanguinity) Frequencies of disease-related alleles, and of marker alleles Ages of disease-related alleles

Complex traits Definition vague, but usually thought of as having multiple, possibly interacting loci, with unknown penetrances; and phenocopies. The terms polygenic and oligogenic are also used, but these do have more specific meanings. There is some evidence that using a range of made-up models can help map genes for complex traits, but no-one really knows. Affected only methods are widely used, with variance component methods becoming popular. The jury is still out on which, if any will succeed. Few success stories so far. Important: heart disease, cancer susceptibility, diabetes, … are all “ complex ” traits.

Design of gene mapping studies How good are your data implying a genetic component to your trait? Can you estimate the size of the genetic component? Have you got, or will you eventually have enough of the right sort of data to have a good chance of getting a definitive result? Power studies Simulations.

Genotyping Choice of markers: highly polymorphic preferred. Heterozygosity and PIC value are the measures commonly used. Reliability of markers important too Good quality data critical: errors can play a surprisingly large role.

Preparing genotype data for analysis Data cleaning is the big issue here. Need much ancillary data…how good is it?

Analysis A very large range of methods/programs are available. Effort to understand their theory will pay off in leading to the right choice of analysis tools. Trying everything is not recommended, but not uncommon. Many opportunities for innovation.

Interpretation of results of analysis An important issue here is whether you have established linkage. The standards seem to be getting increasingly stringent. What p-value or LOD should you use? Dealing with multiple testing, especially in the context of genome scans and the use of multiple models and multiple phenotypes, is one of the big issues.

Replication of results This has recently become a big issue with complex diseases, especially in psychiatry. Nature Genetics suggested in May 1998 that they will require replication before publishing results mapping complex traits. Simulations by Suarez et al (1994) show that sample sizes necessary for replication may be substantially greater than that needed for first detection.

Topics not mentioned Sex-linked traits, sex-specific recombination fractions, liability classes, mutations, genetic heterogeneity, exclusion mapping, homozygosity mapping, interference, variance component methods, twin studies, and much more. Some of these topics plus the ones are covered in two books: Handbook of Human Genetic Linkage by J.D. Terwilliger & J. Ott (1994) Johns Hopkins University Press Analysis of Human Genetic Linkage by J. Ott, 3rd Edition (1999), Johns Hopkins University Press